Cerebral metabolism of isotopic glucose in chronic mental disease

Author:

Sacks William1

Affiliation:

1. Research Facility, Rockland State Hospital, Orangeburg, New York

Abstract

A previous investigation of cerebral metabolism of isotopic glucose in normal human subjects was extended and similar studies performed upon chronic psychiatric patients. With variously labeled glucose-C14 as substrates, average activity-time curves and values for cumulative C14O2 resulting from cerebral oxidation of labeled glucose showed no significant variations between normal and psychotic subjects. A significant difference (P < 0.02) between the two groups did occur in comparing the fraction of brain CO2 derived from glucose. Calculations using individual glucose-U-C14 experiments gave averages of 56% for normal subjects and 36% for mental patients. These values agreed with those derived from composite curves of variously labeled glucose. That less brain CO2 was derived from glucose in psychotic subjects seemed to indicate a greater dilution of some carbohydrate intermediate(s) by protein and/or lipid intermediate(s); and, possibly, a decreased cerebral oxidation of carbohydrate. Theoretical considerations suggested that pyruvate and/or lactate might be the main site(s) of dilution. Submitted on January 28, 1959

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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1. THE CEREBRAL METABOLISM OF L- AND D-LACTATE-C14 IN HUMANS IN VIVO*;Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences;2006-12-16

2. Cerebral Oxidative Metabolism in Hypertension;Clinical Science;1996-11-01

3. Acetazolamide and thiamine: An ancillary therapy for chronic mental illness;Psychiatry Research;1989-06

4. Acetazolamide and Thiamine (A + T);Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology;1988-02

5. New Vistas in Chronic Schizophrenia;International Journal of Neuroscience;1988-01

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